59 F.2d 870 | D.D.C. | 1932
This is a compensation ease, and the appellant is the insurance carrier. The deputy commissioner awarded compensation under the Longshoremen’s and Harbor Workers’ Compensation Act of March 4, 1927 (USCA, title 33, chapter 18), made applicable in the Distiict of Columbia by the Act of May 17, 1928 (45 Stat. 600', c. 612, § 1, D. C. Code, 19Q.9, tit. 19, § II [33 USCA § 901 note]). The carrier brought a suit in the nature of an equity suit in the Supreme Court of the District, in which it prayed for a preliminary injunction to restrain the deputy commissioner from enforcing the award, and also “that the proceedings before said deputy commissioner be reviewed by this court as to the law therein contained, and as to the facts and conclusions of faet determinative of the jurisdiction of the said deputy commissioner to hear said case and make the award hereinbefore set forth.’,’ The trial court dismissed the bill. The sole question before us on this appeal is whether the relation of employer and employee existed.
When the case was heard in the lower court and when the biiefs in this court were liled, the Supreme Coart had not decided Crowell v. Benson, 285 U. S. 23, 52 S. Ct. 285, 76 L. Ed. 598, decided February 23, 1333, but in the argument before us it was insisted that the effect of the decision there is to require us to hold that the deputy commissioner is without jurisdiction here, and that this court should remand the ease to the Supreme Court of the Distiict with instructions to grant a trial de novo. We can find nothing in Crowell v. Benson, supra, to justify such action on our part. In that case, as in this, the employer denied that the relation of employer and employee existed between him and the claimant. The deputy commissioner found in favor of the claimant, and allowed compensation. The employer brought a proceeding under section 21(b) to set aside the order. The district judge transferred the suit to the admiralty side of the court and held a trial de novo, refusing to consider upon any aspect of the ease the record before the deputy commissioner. On the evidence introduced in court, he found that the relation of employer and employee did not exist, and entered a decree setting aside the compensation order. The Supreme Court affirmed the decree.
But here no request was made of the lower court for a trial de novo, nor was any new evidence offered on behalf of the earlier. The court below was asked to consider the question on the evidence adduced before the deputy commissioner, and did so, and no assignment of error in this respect was made on this appeal. Whatever right, therefore, appellant had to have the questions raised by his bill considered by the lower court on new and different evidence was lost by the procedure adopted, and this court must take the ease as it finds it, and this involves our determining on the record before us whether tlu; award made by the deputy commissioner was contrary to law for the reason that deceased at the time of his injury was a partner and not an employee, and his claim therefore not within the jurisdiction of the deputy commissioner.
The evidence shows that Matthews, whom the deputy commissioner found was
This was a small business. Matthews was an uneducated man. He and Raines had wox'ked together for the same employer and Raines possessed qualifications of a clerical nature which he did not. This seems to have been the motive actuating his appeal to Raines to come to him in his new adventure. There is nothing in the evidence which sho-ws that Raines made any contribution to the business in the form of money or property, and there is equally nothing to show that there was ever a divisio-n of profits between them, and while in most instances they divided up each week the surplus earnings, Matthews explains this as nothing more than carrying out his agreement to average up Raines’ wages in such a way that in the period of a year he would receive as much as or more than he had formerly received in his other employment. Matthews, on oath, stated that he was the sole owner of the business and in control of it; that Raines was his employee; that he might dischax-ge him and had discharged him; and that * at all times he controlled the work he was to do and the manner of doing it. His evidence in all these respects is corroborated by the only other permanent employee in the business.
A partnership is frequently described as a contract of two or mox*e competent persons to place their money, effects, labor, and skill, or some or all of them, in lawful commerce or business, and to divide the profit and bear the loss in certain px-oportions. Farmers’ Ins. Co. v. Ross, 29 Ohio St. 429, 431; Richardson v. Carlton, 109 Iowa, 515, 80 N. W. 532; Macomber v. Parker, 13 Pick. (30 Mass.) 175, 181; McClung v. Hughes, 5 Rand. (Va.) 453, 459. The test in most eases is that there must be a community of interest and a joining as principals in carrying on business for joint profit. Hughes v. Ewing, 162 Mo. 261, 62 S. W. 465. And so it has been held that a mere reception of a certain poxiion of the profits is insufficient. Campbell v. Dent, 54 Mo. 325, 334. Nor is an agreement by a merchant to pay an employee a certain salary and, in addition, a
Tn the c-ase at bar there is no direct evidence of partnership, and such evidence, as there is grows wholly out of inferences from other facts. Placing the money of the business in bank to the joint account of Matthews and Raines would, without anything more, indicate joint ownership; but Matthews’ explanation of this is that he was an ignorant man and knew no better and thought, that was a, desirable way to conduct the banking end of the business. The fact that nearly every week they divided equally the earnings would indicate a partnership; but, Matthews’ explanation of this is that the amount divided just about equalled on an average the wages ho had agreed to pay Raines. On the contrary, his right to discharge Raines, on which ho acted on !wo or three occasions without protest fiom Raines, is very strong evidence of the fact that there was no partnership. And when to this is added other indicia of ownership and control on the part of Matthews to which we have referred, we are constrained to think the greater weight "of the evidence sustains the conclusion that Raines at the time he came to his death was an employee and not a partner.
The evidence shows that the premium paid to the carrier was based upon the amount, of wages paid to employees. The policy in effect at the time of Raines’ death was in effect the preceding year. The carrier had regularly made an annual audit of the business to determine the amount of wages paid in order to collect the correct amount of premium. This audit it had in its possession. If Raines’ wages were not included in computing the premium, it had -the opportunity of showing the fact, and the fact in this regard, if not controlling, would have been at least enlightening. It offered no such proof and made no effort to do so. It must be presumed, therefore, under the well-established rule, that such proof, if offered, would have been against its interests.
Tn the Crowell v. Benson Case, supra, the Supreme Court held the fact of employment an essential condition precedent to the right to make the claim, and the determination of the deputy commissioner as to this neither final nor conclusive. The result of this is to leave to the trial court the determination of the existence of this fact, which, the Supreme Court says, is fundamental. In the proceedings below the carrier might have made a new record. It did not, but certified up to that court for consideration the evidence taken before the deputy commissioner. The fact that the evidence so taken and so certified was taken in disregard of technical rules of procedurei does not invalidate it or render it any the less entitled to consideration, and we have examined it as it was certified here to determine whether the compensation statute applies, and since, as we have seen, we agree with the lower court that the relation of master and servant did exist, and since there is no dispute as to the other essential facts, the decree of the lower court must be and is affirmed.
Affirmed.